Well, if you increase the pressure of the atmosphere, isothermally, around water high enough, then you will overcome the 'vapour pressure' of the water, or the pressure of the water's surface back on the atmosphere to put is very, very simply. SOOOO, if you increase gravity, then you increase atmospheric pressure, which will condense any water vapour in the air. You can decrease gravity to see that the vapour pressure of the newly condensed liquid water will overcome the atmospheric pressure and vaporize. Keep in mind this works in standard conditions, not at extreme temperatures and pressures.
As a physycist, I can assure you this has no effect.
Yes. It makes things fall. Answer2: Gravity establishes the orbiting velocity, v2 = GM/r.
The gravity of Earth pulls the water onto the surface of the planet and is responsible for some of the propagation of waves. The gravity of the Moon and Sun pull on Earth's water and are responsible for the tides.
It has to get up to 7km a second to get out of earth's orbit, then it orbits around earth.
condensation, precipitation, and condensation
A change in the amount of water vapor in the air affects humidity and that's how condensation affect the weather.
Does gravity affect a person's height and why?
The greater the mass, the stronger the gravity, but the distance does not affect the amount of gravity.
Gravity.
No, Earth's gravity would not affect Pluto. However, the suns gravity does.
None. Fog is merely condensation.
no
The size of a rugby player does not affect gravity in any way.
Gravity inhibits flight.
nothing, there is no gravity in space
No, temperature does not affect the force of gravity. Gravity is a fundamental force of nature that is determined by the mass and distance between objects, not by temperature. Temperature may affect the properties of objects or materials, but it does not influence the strength of gravity.
No.